This page last changed on Jun 17, 2007 by rosie@atlassian.com.

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Displays the contents of an RSS feed.

RSS is an Internet standard for syndicating news, and is used by many news sites and weblogs.
Please note that updates are only retrieved after at least an hour has elapsed since the last update.

Usage:
{rss:url=my_rss_url}

Parameter Required Default Description
my_rss_url yes none the url to the RSS feed
max no none Maximum entries to be displayed
showTitlesOnly no false Show only the title of the enrty

Example:
{rss:url=http://feeds.feedburner.com/AtlassianDeveloperBlog}

gives:

Atlassian Developer Blog (rss_2.0)
Bamboo 1.2 and Acegi Security
In Bamboo 1.2, we introduced plan level permissions as a major feature. Already with an Acegi Security framework in place, we figured it was a natural extension to build our permissions framework on top of Acegi. Bamboo Security Architecture There...
My God, it's full of stars.
It's only a matter of time before we pick up some bones and attack the Bamboo team.
Fix your builds, the easy way!
Like the JIRA team, the Confluence team has a screen set up to monitor the health of our Bamboo builds. Unfortunately we we've been having a nightmare of a time keeping them green. Lateral thinking to the rescue!
un.del.icio.us
One of the more useful things that we do to collaborate inside Atlassian is use a group del.icio.us feed to share bookmarks to everyone else in the company. On their first day, every employee signs up for at least two...
Developer Network is reopened for business
All of our services: JIRA, SVN, Fisheye and Bamboo are all running on a Crowd backend now. Unfortunately, we weren't able to actually merge everyone's various accounts -- so if you had a 'jnolen' account in SVN and a 'jonathan@atlassian.com'...
Developer SVN and JIRA will be offline for maintenance
Heads up, everyone. We're going to be taking the Developer Network JIRA and SVn offline for a while starting this afternoon (1pm PDT). We're moving our developer network infrastructure over to Crowd-based authentication, so once we're finished you'll only have...
When caching is not caching
Back in July last year (how time flies), I investigated how we could use caching in our products to improve the user experience. This resulting in creating a framework for serving content that can be cached on the client. We...
iPhoned Atlassian
Admittedly, I am a gadget girl. Over the years, I've been known to make a variety of smart phone purchases— some better than others, some that still cause me to wake sweat-soaked and screaming in the dead of night....
IE7 on Vista and SSL
We recently had a problem where a customer wasn't able to access JIRA via SSL from IE7 on Windows Vista (and IE 5.5 on WinNT although we never got to test that). Firefox worked fine. IE7 from Windows XP worked...
Atlassian User Group Conference in Stanford, CA on Thursday (June 28th)
This Thursday we're having an official Atlassian User Group conference and you're invited! If you're in the San Francisco Bay Area, come and join in on the fun. Along with a set agenda, which promises interesting sessions from Atlassian...
OpenID - is it even useful?
There has been lots of speculation regrading whether OpenID is actually useful and I've often asked myself what can OpenID actually do for a company. If you're interested in what OpenID can do for SSO/trust/webapps, then have a read. If...
Clustering Cisco routers with VRRP and SLAs
As part of the move our new Sydney office we purchased a duplicate of our main router, a Cisco 1841. This was necessary as we wanted to have the network fully installed and tested before the move started in order...
ANTLR lecture at Atlassian in Sydney this evening
Terence Parr is presenting ANTLR this evening Wednesday 20 June at our new office here in Sydney: 173-185 Sussex Street Sydney, NSW, 2000 Australia Google Map reference is http://tinyurl.com/yu9hh8 The time is 6:00pm for beer and pizza, 6:30 start. The...
Architecture Diagrams
In an effort to answer a question last week, support engineer Jeremy knocked up this quick diagram of the JIRA architecture to aid in his explanation. (N.B.: The diagram was later enhanced by some helpful developers.) Later, someone asked a...
Somebody Didn't Want Me To Func Test This
For much of this week I have been taken from my bug fixing work to drag a functional test kicking and screaming across the fine line that separates working from broken. This test was to ensure that JIRA's "Johnson" servlet...
Document generated by Confluence on Jul 26, 2007 22:38